Reviews tagging 'Fire/Fire injury'

Prinsessenacademie by Shannon Hale

1 review

noellegrace8's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional funny hopeful inspiring lighthearted reflective tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

5.0

I read this a long time ago in middle school, and I remember thinking even then that it deserved its Newberry Honor Award. Perhaps I'm biased, though, because this is basically a cold-weather & mild-fantasy version of Appalachian folklore/culture. I think that's why I love it - I'm from West Virginia and don't often see books that portray love for small-scale, simple life borne of tradition. This book is great at doing just that. It gives me nostalgia and a sense of home even though the setting and people are different enough from my own home.

Character-wise, I love me a lost, oblivious ENTP finding their strength and healing, and that's just what Miri is. She's a loveable character with plenty to offer her little side of the world (and maybe even beyond those borders). She's inspiring and works toward bettering herself always.

Plot-wise, how could a person not love this little story? It's one of those ones that seems to pull on traditional "princess"/monarchy rules but manages to make it completely fresh. It is a bit juvenile in some areas, but I can't dock anything off of its star rating for that, because it is clearly middle-grade fiction. It's *supposed* to have some silly dialogue, lack of proper interpersonal communication in relationships, cut-and-dry motivations and developments, and a 14-year-old kid who is somehow more intelligent than her village elders. Lol. Altogether, such a worthwhile read.

I don't factor audiobook performance into the overall star rating of a book, but I give this cast a general 3/5 for their narration. Honestly, this sounded a lot like free LibriVox recordings. The performers were void of emotion, except when they were swinging the opposite way and had too much, cheesy emotion in their tones. And these supposedly teenage characters sounded like 8- to 12-year-olds. It was just... not good. Additionally, why did they keep saying pay-der instead of pete-er?? I never imagined that, just because it was spelled with a D instead of a T, it would be pronounced any differently...

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